[考研类试卷]考研英语模拟试卷157及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语模拟试卷 157及答案与解析 一、 Section I Use of English Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D. (10 points) 1 What Will Be is an impressive and visionary guide to the future, filled with insights on how information technology will transform
2、our lives and our world in the new century. The author, Michael Dertouzos, stands (1)_ from many of the forecasters and commentators who bombard us daily with (2)_ of this future. For twenty years he has led one of the worlds (3)_ research laboratories, whose members have brought the world (4)_ comp
3、uters, the Ether Net, and start-up companies. As a visionary, his (5)_ have been on the mark: In 1981, he described the (6)_ of an Information Marketplace as “a twenty-first-century village marketplace where people and computers buy, sell, and freely exchange information and information services.“ T
4、hats a (7)_ description of the Internet as we know it today. Naturally, we do not agree on all the (8)_ ways the new world will (9)_ or affect us. This is as it should be. There is plenty of room for (10)_ ideas and debate concerning the rich and promising setting ahead. Whats more important is that
5、 people become (11)_, and form their own opinions, about the changes (12)_. When it (13)_ to that future world, what we do (14)_ far outweighs our differences New businesses will be created and new (15)_ will be made in the (16)_ areas of activity this book describes. More important, radical changes
6、 in hardware, software, and infrastructure will (17)_ in ways large and small our social lives, our families, our jobs, our health, our environment, our economy, and even the (18)_ we see for ourselves in the universe. Whoever (19)_ the coming Information Revolution? thats (20)_ all of us needs to k
7、now What Will Be. ( A) beyond ( B) behind ( C) apart ( D) out ( A) highlights ( B) perceptions ( C) adventures ( D) speculations ( A) empirical ( B) wearisome ( C) tentative ( D) pioneering ( A) updated ( B) fair-minded ( C) underprivileged ( D) well-defined ( A) transactions ( B) interpretations (
8、C) reflections ( D) predictions ( A) thought ( B) concept ( C) view ( D) angle ( A) desirable ( B) inaccurate ( C) monetary ( D) dismayed ( A) mere ( B) typical ( C) specific ( D) odd ( A) evolve ( B) assemble ( C) betray ( D) depress ( A) ingenuous ( B) pervasive ( C) democratic ( D) original ( A)
9、informed ( B) acquainted ( C) confined ( D) reassured ( A) past ( B) inwards ( C) ahead ( D) upside-down ( A) adds ( B) amounts ( C) leads ( D) comes ( A) scorn ( B) consent ( C) encounter ( D) surpass ( A) dooms ( B) fortunes ( C) destinies ( D) prophecies ( A) lofty ( B) supreme ( C) alien ( D) no
10、vel ( A) reign ( B) alter ( C) chock ( D) breed ( A) scope ( B) context ( C) range ( D) territory ( A) anticipates ( B) justifies ( C) dominates ( D) foretells ( A) plausibly ( B) thoroughly ( C) virtually ( D) radically Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below ea
11、ch text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points) 21 At some point during their education, biology students are told about a conversation in a pub that took place over 50 years ago. J.B.S. Haldane, a British geneticist, was asked whether he would lay down his life for his country. After doing a quick ca
12、lculation on the back of a napkin, he said he would do so for two brothers or eight cousins. In other words, he would die to protect the equivalent of his genetic contribution to the next generation. The theory of kin selection the idea that animals can pass on their genes by helping their close rel
13、atives is biologys explanation for seemingly altruistic acts. An individual carrying genes that promote altruism might be expected to die younger than one with “selfish“ genes, and thus to have a reduced contribution to the next generations genetic pool But if the same individual acts altruistically
14、 to protect its relatives, genes for altruistic behavior might nevertheless propagate. Acts of apparent altruism to non-relatives can also be explained away, in what has become a cottage industry within biology. An animal might care for the offspring of another that it is unrelated to because it hop
15、es to obtain the same benefits for itself later on (a phenomenon known as reciprocal altruism). The hunter who generously shares his spoils with others may be doing so in order to signal his superior status to females, and ultimately boost his breeding success. These apparently selfless acts are the
16、refore disguised acts of self-interest. All of these examples fit economists arguments that Homo sapiens is also Homo economics maximizing something that economists call utility, and biologists fitness. But there is a residuum of human activity that defies such explanations: people contribute to cha
17、rities for the homeless, return lost wallets, do voluntary work and tip waiters in restaurants to which they do not plan to return. Both economic rationalism and natural selection offer few explanations for such random acts of kindness. Nor can they easily explain the opposite: spiteful behavior, wh
18、en someone harms his own interest in order to damage that of another. But people are now trying to find answers. When a new phenomenon is recognized by science, a name always helps. In a paper in Human Nature, Dr. Fehr and his colleagues argue for a behavioral propensity they call “strong reciprocit
19、y“. This name is intended to distinguish it from reciprocal altruism. According to Dr. Fehr, a person is a strong reciprocator if he is willing to sacrifice resources to be kind to those who are being kind, and to punish those who are being unkind. Significantly, strong reciprocators will behave thi
20、s way even if doing so provides no prospect of material rewards in the future. 21 The story of J.B.S. Haldane is mentioned in the text _. ( A) to honor his unusual altruistic acts. ( B) to show how he contributed to the country. ( C) to introduce the topic of human altruism. ( D) to give an episode
21、of his calculation abilities. 22 According the theory of kin selection, humans tend to act altruistically _. ( A) for the sake of desired reproduction. ( B) out of self-interest. ( C) on the request of natural selection. ( D) because of kind nature. 23 As pointed out in the text, “reciprocal altruis
22、m theory“ and “strong reciprocity theory“ are _. ( A) complementary. ( B) contradictory. ( C) superficial. ( D) over-simplified. 24 The writer mentioned the case of “the hunter who shares his spoils with others“ to demonstrate _. ( A) innate human hostility. ( B) his privileged status. ( C) apparent
23、 human altruism. ( D) his sacrifice resources. 25 It can be inferred from Paragraph 4 that _. ( A) human behavior is confined to the exclusive concern of psychologists. ( B) economists utility is only the explanations for random acts of kindness. ( C) altruism is developed during the long process of
24、 human evolution. ( D) biologists can help economists explain some human behavior deviations. 26 Can this be the right time to invest in luxury goods? Miuccia Prada was obviously biting her nails. The granddaughter of the founder of the Italian fashion group has just opened spectacular new stores in
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